DAZL Knockout Pigs as Recipients for Spermatogonial Stem Cell Transplantation

Author:

Lara Nathalia L. M.1ORCID,Goldsmith Taylor2,Rodriguez-Villamil Paula2,Ongaratto Felipe2,Solin Staci2,Webster Dennis2,Ganbaatar Uyanga2,Hodgson Shane2,Corbière Stanislas M. A. S.2ORCID,Bondareva Alla1,Carlson Daniel F.2,Dobrinski Ina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N4N1, Canada

2. Recombinetics, Inc., St. Paul, MN 55121, USA

Abstract

Spermatogonial stem cell (SSC) transplantation into the testis of a germ cell (GC)-depleted surrogate allows transmission of donor genotype via donor-derived sperm produced by the recipient. Transplantation of gene-edited SSCs provides an approach to propagate gene-edited large animal models. DAZL is a conserved RNA-binding protein important for GC development, and DAZL knockout (KO) causes defects in GC commitment and differentiation. We characterized DAZL-KO pigs as SSC transplantation recipients. While there were GCs in 1-week-old (wko) KO, complete GC depletion was observed by 10 wko. Donor GCs were transplanted into 18 DAZL-KO recipients at 10–13 wko. At sexual maturity, semen and testes were evaluated for transplantation efficiency and spermatogenesis. Approximately 22% of recipient seminiferous tubules contained GCs, including elongated spermatids and proliferating spermatogonia. The ejaculate of 89% of recipients contained sperm, exclusively from donor origin. However, sperm concentration was lower than the wild-type range. Testicular protein expression and serum hormonal levels were comparable between DAZL-KO and wild-type. Intratesticular testosterone and Leydig cell volume were increased, and Leydig cell number decreased in transplanted DAZL-KO testis compared to wild-type. In summary, DAZL-KO pigs support donor-derived spermatogenesis following SSC transplantation, but low spermatogenic efficiency currently limits their use for the production of offspring.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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